U2 defeats 'Achtung Baby' lawsuit

U2 has defeated a lawsuit alleging the Irish super group copied a British songwriter's 13-second guitar riff for its song The Fly.

A US judge has dismissed a lawsuit accusing U2 of lifting part of a British songwriter's work for a song on the Irish rock band's 1991 blockbuster album Achtung Baby.

US District Judge Denise Cote in Manhattan rejected Paul Rose's claim that U2 willfully copied from a 13-second guitar riff near the start of his 1989 instrumental Nae Slappin, to create a 12-second segment featuring a guitar solo for its song The Fly.

Rose, who lives in New York, claimed that U2 copied from his song "virtually note-for-note," and also used a tambourine and the same drum, percussion and bass line without permission.

But the judge said the riff was not a "sufficiently substantial" portion of Nae Slappin, a 3-1/2-minute composition that "demonstrates the plaintiff's impressive guitar skills," to be a protectable "fragment" of the work.

She also said that even if the riff were protectable, a reasonable jury could not find that U2 copied it.

Rose had been seeking at least $US5 million in damages from U2 lead singer Bono; bandmates The Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr., and UMG Recordings Inc, a Vivendi SA unit that releases records under U2's label Island Records.

He claimed he had given Island a demo tape of Nae Slappin that was later incorporated into The Fly.


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Source: AAP


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